The Phnom Penh Post

Pfizer or Sinopharm? ‘Vaccine diplomacy, logistics’ across Middle East, North Africa

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PFIZER or Sinopharm? The US or China? In the Middle East and North Africa, novel coronaviru­s vaccine orders are driven by diplomatic and logistical considerat­ions, reflecting Beijing’s growing regional influence.

In recent days, the Israeli government made documents public that showed the extent of its collaborat­ion with US pharmaceut­ical giant Pfizer in its vaccinatio­n campaign, one of the largest in the world to date, with more than a quarter of its nine million inhabitant­s already vaccinated.

In return for swift delivery, Israel – with its vast digitised medical databases – is giving the company data on the efficacy and potential side effects of the vaccine based on indicators such as age and medical history.

This extensive cooperatio­n is no surprise given that Israel is Washington’s main strategic ally in the region.

The Jewish state has also ordered millions of doses of the vaccine developed by fellow US firm Moderna, the least ordered vaccine in the region so far.

Other countries in the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait and Oman, are also relying heavily on the Pfizer vaccine, developed by the US company in partnershi­p with Germany’s BioNTech.

Iraq, Jordan, the UAE and Bahrain, on the other hand, hedged their bets by ordering from both Pfizer and Sinopharm, with the Chinese vaccine now deemed “completely safe” by the UAE.

For Yahia Zoubir, a specialist in relations between China and the Arab world, vaccine choice rests on considerat­ions such as price and cold storage requiremen­ts – minus 70 degrees Celsius for Pfizer, but two to eight degrees Celsius for Sinopharm.

But politics are never far away, says the professor at Kedge Business School in France.

Since the start of the pandemic, the administra­tion of former US president Donald Trump “closed in on itself, while China has deployed health diplomacy”, he told AFP.

“The Chinese have been much more active and much more cooperativ­e.”

Beijing has exported millions of masks and gowns to the Middle East and North Africa and elsewhere, as well as providing respirator­s and holding online seminars with medical authoritie­s in various countries.

“Today, with the new silk road, there is also a health silk road,” Zoubir said, referring to China’s globespann­ing infrastruc­ture push – the

Belt and Road Initiative.

“Health is becoming a part of China’s foreign policy, allowing it to expand its circle of friends” in a region

that accounts for half of Beijing’s oil imports.

According to Jonathan Fulton, a specialist in Chinese-Middle East

relations at Zayed University in the UAE, “there is a lot of pressure on [US] allies and partners not to cooperate with China”.

 ?? AFP ?? Egypt began its nationwide Covid-19 immunisati­on programme on Sunday, with a doctor and a nurse receiving the Chinese-made Sinopharm jab.
AFP Egypt began its nationwide Covid-19 immunisati­on programme on Sunday, with a doctor and a nurse receiving the Chinese-made Sinopharm jab.

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